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Showing 1 to 15 of 47 results Save | Export
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Myers, Brett R.; Watson, Duane G. – Cognitive Science, 2021
Rhythmic structure in speech is characterized by sequences of stressed and unstressed syllables. A large body of literature suggests that speakers of English attempt to achieve rhythmic harmony by evenly distributing stressed syllables throughout prosodic phrases. The question remains as to how speakers plan metrical structure during speech…
Descriptors: Speech, Suprasegmentals, Syllables, Phonemes
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Macrae, Toby – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 2017
Purpose: This clinical focus article provides readers with a description of the stimulus characteristics of 12 popular tests of speech sound production. Method: Using significance testing and descriptive analyses, stimulus items were compared in terms of the number of opportunities for production of all consonant singletons, clusters, and rhotic…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Morphemes, Phonemes, Vowels
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Coalson, Geoffrey A.; Byrd, Courtney T. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2015
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to explore metrical aspects of phonological encoding (i.e., stress and syllable boundary assignment) in adults who do and do not stutter (AWS and AWNS, respectively). Method: Participants monitored nonwords for target sounds during silent phoneme monitoring tasks across two distinct experiments. For…
Descriptors: Adults, Stuttering, Phonology, Phonemes
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Burke, Heidi L.; Coady, Jeffry A. – International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 2015
Background: Two ubiquitous findings from the literature are that (1) children with specific language impairments (SLI) repeat nonwords less accurately than peers with typical language development (TLD), and (2) all children repeat nonwords with frequent phonotactic patterns more accurately than low-probability nonwords. Many studies have examined…
Descriptors: Children, Language Impairments, Repetition, Error Patterns
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Smalle, Eleonore H. M.; Muylle, Merel; Szmalec, Arnaud; Duyck, Wouter – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2017
Speech errors typically respect the speaker's implicit knowledge of language-wide phonotactics (e.g., /t/ cannot be a syllable onset in the English language). Previous work demonstrated that adults can learn novel experimentally induced phonotactic constraints by producing syllable strings in which the allowable position of a phoneme depends on…
Descriptors: Children, Adults, Speech, Syllables
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Sohail, Juwairia; Johnson, Elizabeth K. – Language Learning and Development, 2016
Much of what we know about the development of listeners' word segmentation strategies originates from the artificial language-learning literature. However, many artificial speech streams designed to study word segmentation lack a salient cue found in all natural languages: utterance boundaries. In this study, participants listened to a…
Descriptors: Phonology, Linguistic Theory, Speech, Cues
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Mücke, Doris; Becker, Johannes; Barbe, Michael T.; Meister, Ingo; Liebhart, Lena; Roettger, Timo B.; Dembek, Till; Timmermann, Lars; Grice, Martine – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2014
Purpose: Chronic deep brain stimulation of the nucleus ventralis intermedius is an effective treatment for individuals with medication-resistant essential tremor. However, these individuals report that stimulation has a deleterious effect on their speech. The present study investigates one important factor leading to these effects: the…
Descriptors: Brain, Stimulation, Speech, Articulation (Speech)
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Dumay, Nicolas; Content, Alain – Journal of Memory and Language, 2012
Two auditory priming experiments tested whether the effect of final phonological overlap relies on syllabic representations. Amount of shared phonemic information and syllabic status of the overlap between nonword primes and targets were varied orthogonally. In the related conditions, CV.CCVC items shared the last syllable (e.g., vi.klyd-p[image…
Descriptors: Priming, Syllables, Phonemes, Auditory Perception
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Hoover, Eric C.; Souza, Pamela E.; Gallun, Frederick J. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2012
Purpose: The benefits of amplitude compression in hearing aids may be limited by distortion resulting from rapid gain adjustment. To evaluate this, it is convenient to quantify distortion by using a metric that is sensitive to the changes in the processed signal that decrease consonant recognition, such as the Envelope Difference Index (EDI;…
Descriptors: Assistive Technology, Acoustics, Phonemes, Recognition (Psychology)
Segawa, Jennifer Anne – ProQuest LLC, 2013
Speech utterances are phoneme sequences but may not always be represented as such in the brain. For instance, electropalatography evidence indicates that as speaking rate increases, gestures within syllables are manipulated separately but those within consonant clusters act as one motor unit. Moreover, speech error data suggest that a syllable's…
Descriptors: Brain, Speech, Neurological Organization, Phonemes
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Wren, Yvonne; McLeod, Sharynne; White, Paul; Miller, Laura L.; Roulstone, Sue – Journal of Communication Disorders, 2013
Speech disorder that continues into middle childhood is rarely studied compared with speech disorder in the early years. Speech production in single words, connected speech and nonword repetition was assessed for 7390 eight-year-old children within the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC). The majority (n=6399) had typical…
Descriptors: Accuracy, Language Impairments, Speech, Syllables
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Guillot, Kathryn M.; Ohde, Ralph N.; Hedrick, Mark – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2013
Purpose: This study was conducted to determine whether the perceptions of nasal consonants in children with normal hearing and children with cochlear implants were predicted by the discontinuity hypothesis. Methods: Four groups participated: 8 adults, 8 children with normal hearing (ages 5-7 years), 8 children with normal hearing (ages 3.5-4…
Descriptors: Perceptual Development, Phonemes, Children, Hearing Impairments
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Sundström, Simon; Samuelsson, Christina; Lyxell, Björn – First Language, 2014
In this study, segmental and prosodic aspects of word repetition and non-word repetition in typically developing children aged four to six years were investigated. Focus was on developmental differences, and on how tonal word accent and word length affect segment production accuracy. Prosodically controlled words and non-words were repeated by 44…
Descriptors: Intonation, Suprasegmentals, Intervention, Language Acquisition
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Whalen, D. H.; Giulivi, Sara; Nam, Hosung; Levitt, Andrea G.; Halle, Pierre; Goldstein, Louis M. – Language and Speech, 2012
Certain consonant/vowel (CV) combinations are more frequent than would be expected from the individual C and V frequencies alone, both in babbling and, to a lesser extent, in adult language, based on dictionary counts: Labial consonants co-occur with central vowels more often than chance would dictate; coronals co-occur with front vowels, and…
Descriptors: English, Speech, Vowels, Oral Language
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Mersad, Karima; Nazzi, Thierry – Language Learning and Development, 2012
Transitional Probability (TP) computations are regarded as a powerful learning mechanism that is functional early in development and has been proposed as an initial bootstrapping device for speech segmentation. However, a recent study casts doubt on the robustness of early statistical word-learning. Johnson and Tyler (2010) showed that when…
Descriptors: Probability, Infants, Cues, Robustness (Statistics)
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